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A small head carved from New Zealand kauri gum, depicting a young Māori woman with long, dark hair and black tattoos (moko kuia) covering her chin. Kauri gum (called kapia by the Maori) is a naturally produced type of resin. The Māori people carved items such as this and then hand-painted them with detailing in black. Kauri gum is formed when resin exudes from a crack in the bark of the kauri tree, native to the northern districts of New Zealand. The resin can build up into large lumps which go hard when exposed to air. It can be found in colours ranging from pale yellow to reddish-brown and even black. The bark continually sheds as the tree grows, forcing the gum off onto the ground around the tree. This is why it is usually found in fossilised form, which is harder and usually paler and more translucent than that found in living forests.

Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

Bournemouth

Title

Māori Woman*

Medium

gum & kauri gum

Measurements

H 9 x W 6.5 x D 6 cm

Accession number

:690.54.22.1 BORGM

Acquisition method

gift from Councillor A. C. Meader, 1954

Work type

Sculpture

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Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum

Russell-Cotes Road, East Cliff, Bournemouth, Dorset BH1 3AA England

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